Adverse Selection as a Policy Instrument: Unraveling Climate Change

Thursday 7 November 2024 12:15-13:15,
UiS, Ullandhaug Campus, Elise Ottesen-Jensens hus,
EOJ-276/277 / Teams.

An Economics and Finance Seminar with Morten Graugaard Olsen, University of Copenhagen

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Welcome to the UiS School of Business and Law seminar, Economics and Finance. The seminar is open for all interested.
  • Date: Thursday November 7
  • Time: 12:15-13:15.
  • Place: University of Stavanger School of Business and Law, Ullandhaug Campus, Elise Ottesen-Jensens hus, room EOJ 276/277 and on Teams
  • Link to Teams meeting
  • Meeting-ID: 352 296 995 85
  • Password: i39Urz

  • Title: Adverse Selection as a Policy Instrument: Unraveling Climate Change∗ (link)

Abstract:

This paper applies principles of adverse selection to overcome obstacles that prevent the implementation of Pigouvian policies to internalize externalities. Focusing on negative externalities from production (such as pollution), we consider settings in which aggregate emissions are known, but individual contributions are unobserved by the government. We evaluate a policy that gives firms the option to pay a tax on their voluntarily and verifiably disclosed emissions, or pay an output tax based on the average rate of emissions among the undisclosed firms. The certification of relatively clean firms raises the output-based tax, setting off a process of unraveling in favor of disclosure. We derive sufficient statistics formulas to calculate the welfare of such a program relative to mandatory output or emissions taxes. We find that the voluntary certification mechanism would deliver significant gains over output-based taxation in two empirical applications: methane emissions from oil and gas fields, and carbon emissions from imported steel